Needed: Blue-Collar Horse Sense

Categories:

The article in The Washington Post filled me with hope: There’s a trend toward college-educated people getting into the trades.

One 29-year-old fellow in Washington, D.C. — he has a degree from Notre Dame — considered going to law school, like many others in the lawyer-saturated town.

After watching his friends work long hours as paralegals — and watching his lawyer pals sign their lives over to their firms — he did something sensible.

Cartoon by Gary McCoy - Cagle Cartoons (click to reprint)
Cartoon by Gary McCoy – Cagle Cartoons (click to reprint)

He became an electrician’s apprentice.

He’s not alone. The Post says more 20-somethings are forgoing the white-collar world to become plumbers, electricians, mechanics and carpenters.

I think it’s great.

This country was designed by people who worked with their hands.

Ben Franklin started off as a printer’s apprentice, a messy job. His trade helped him master communication, business management, politics and human nature.

George Washington, a farmer, toiled in his gardens to cross-breed the perfect plant. He was forever trying new ways to cultivate and harvest his crops.

Many of our Founders were farmers. They were humbled by the unforgiving realities of nature.

Hands-on labor made these fellows sensible and innovative. Their good sense is evident in the practicality of the Constitution.

We have lost touch with such common sense.

The shift happened over many years, of course. Industrialization moved Americans to the cities and, gradually, to paper-pushing jobs in the service industry.

Now we’re a country of white-collar snobs with an underdeveloped understanding of how things work.

The snobbery starts in high school. Parents and guidance counselors both point kids toward college and white-collar careers — they save the blue-collar careers for the kids whose grades aren’t so hot.

It makes no sense.

A skilled laborer earns more than many lawyers do — and likely enjoys his work more. Show me a dozen lawyers and I’ll show you 11 people who have considered driving a cab for a living.

Skilled laborers are good for our country — white-collar folks are not always so good.

Consider an important white-collar maxim: “If you can’t dazzle them with brilliance, baffle then with BS.”

I’ve seen highly skilled BSers establish long careers without producing anything of any value.

Blue-collar workers cannot BS their way through their work.

An electrician mixes up the hot wire and ground wire only once.

A carpenter is kept honest by his level — he measures twice, cuts once.

A plumber’s skill is evident when the water valve is opened and the pipes don’t leak.

Blue-collar workers have no choice but to develop horse sense — to develop efficient ways to solve real problems.

There was a time in America when many white-collar jobs were also infused with horse sense. An employee started as a bank teller right out of high school. He’d work his way up, through performance and sound judgment, to the highest levels of the organization.

Now any old Ivy League graduate can become an investment banker and put his company, and country, at incredible risk as he pursues a multmillion-dollar commission.

I hope more college-educated folks leave the white-collar world to become skilled laborers.

I hope we stop glamorizing careers on Wall Street, the legal profession and many other paper-pushing businesses.

I hope more people use their hands to produce something of value every day — and use their practical, decision-making abilities to help resolve other challenges we face.

If we don’t get a serious infusion of blue-collar horse sense, God help this country.

©2010 Tom Purcell. Tom Purcell, a freelance writer is also a humor columnist for the Pittsburgh Tribune-Review, and is nationally syndicated exclusively by Cagle Cartoons newspaper syndicate. For more info contact Cari Dawson Bartley at 800 696 7561 or email [email protected]. E-mail Tom at [email protected].


Comments

15 responses to “Needed: Blue-Collar Horse Sense”

  1. GWA Avatar
    GWA

    Tom, When I went to high school (and jr. high) back in the fifties in California, we had hands on classes in auto shop, woodworking, metal shop, horticulture, drafting, electrical, and several others. All students were encouraged to take these classes along with their

    academics. Now the schools have cut, or are cutting these classes along with music and art. So much for well rounded citizens

  2. notSOold Avatar
    notSOold

    GWA, I only graduated high school ten years ago and I was required to take all those classes along with a 'life skills' class that covered running a household budget and balancing a checkbook. I'm continually shocked at the number of people older than me who tell me to ignore the budget guidelines I was taught (which have served me extremely well over the years). More practical classes are not the answer.

    I have siblings who are in high school now and they are being pushed to graduate already having certification in a trade (electrician, nursing, IT, etc) which they completed alongside their high school courses. High school is so myopically focused on vocational training that it no longer attempts to educate people – and was ten years ago too. In my high school music programs were being cut and students were being taught to read spreadsheets instead of literature because misguided educators were being pressured by parents and politicians to teach more 'real world' skills instead of recognizing that, unless one somehow gets through university for free, high school is the last chance most kids get to learn subjects for the sake of it – before adult pressure sets in and they have to pay by the credit hour. Smart kids are pushed (as I was) to graduate early and start college immediately . I attended a local community college concurrently with high school. In retrospect I think that was a mistake and the couple of years I spent teaching at a high school I told my students the same thing – enjoy being young and do the things you want to do, because when you have to pay for everything you never do anything just for fun.

    There needs to be balance in education between traditional studies and vocational training. Personally, I think we should let kids be kids in high school, and make apprenticeship programs available as an alternative to college for people who don't want or don't feel they need a college education. But for that to be a respectable, and perfectly legitimate path (as it is in many other places), we have to let go of this idea that manual labor is only for morons (the oblique point of the article).

    But good luck telling that to parents. I was told as early as 5th grade by teachers and 'career advisors' that my scores and grades needed to be excellent or I wouldn't be able to get into a good college and would be a loser forever. Now that I am a parent I have found out that they do IQ tests for pre-school. It's insane and unhealthy.

  3. Geri Avatar
    Geri

    I am so pleased to see this trend and the letters above. While education is to always be recommended, the cost of repaying student loans has not been met by most of the jobs that graduates can find once they are suposedly complete with a degree. My son took the other route, is an electrician, loves working with his hands, helping solve his customers' issues and the freedom of moving from job to job. I've long thought schools should teach kids to do SOMETHING that will earn them a living – as it will keep kids in school longer and improve the economy in general by giving them a skill to use and build upon. Great column!

  4. stilt21 Avatar
    stilt21

    yes need all those skilled workers, always have, though we do not always treat them with respect. consider the loss of trade training in public schools.

    however what we do not need is some smartass who makes his living writing newspaper columns and producing nothing, back to you tom

  5. Ron Avatar
    Ron

    There is a simplistic search for answers in this discussion that concerns me. The idea that a person has more than one skill is a success principle. The idea that blue collar carreers can be just as rewarding as white collar ones is a valid point. Going against the flow of job seekers can be rewarding as well. Learning how to make and spend money in a collapsing economy is the concern of all young people. During that last great recession (signaled by a sharp rise in the cost of fuel), I drove a truck, did carpentry, black top driveways, plumbers helper, machinist, pest control and advertising sales executive. I went back to college to learn business and ended up working as a Journeyman Millwright. All of those skills that I learned made me a well rounded, relatively poor person. Whatever you decide to do, stick to it because you enjoy it and see a future in it–otherwise go find yourself and for the love of God–pick up a book! Now, go do something.

  6. Ron Avatar
    Ron

    Oh Tom,

    A plumber knows his work was good when he closes the valve–that would be counter-clockwise by the way.

  7. Bob Avatar
    Bob

    I've seen the value of this for years. I enjoy umpiring HS and Little League baseball. My white color job does not get out an at hour to umpire games at 4:30 in the afternoon. Sometimes getting home for a 6:00 game is difficult. Yet I see bread delivery man own their own routes, I see roofers, landscapers, people from many trades who have worked their way up to running their own business. They start work early, they leave work early on the days they have something to do and they make more than me. They seem to have more time to spend w /their family and persue other things that interest them, but continue to work hard.

    I envy these people for their skills, their ability to do something they love, and how their trade affords them to strike a balanced life.

  8. Jim Avatar
    Jim

    Not every high school offers the same classes. There is a wide difference from state to state, and even within states.

    Also, with more and more manufacturing being out-sourced to foreign lands in the name of the "Bottom Line," there are less skilled jobs available.

    The building trades are good only so long as there is a building boom. Urban sprawl – one of the sources of our difficulties.

    Maybe we, the nation, just need to pull our cranial cavities from their rectal repositories and figure out a way to live that serves everyone, instead of just the "bottom line" (usually read – some guys we don't know who make the decisions and reap the rewards that the rest of us never see).

  9. Just annother vet Avatar
    Just annother vet

    In my college days I was a carpenter, a skill that has helped me through several home improvement projects over the years. I believe that knowing a trade is essential to becoming a well rounded individual. A college degree, however, has been the key that opened many doors for me over the years. I thought I would go to college to prepare to become a doctor, but my grades weren't med-school material. What I ended up with was an education, acquired over a period of time, during which I worked odd jobs in addition to carpentry, got married, and absorbed a wealth of information one can only get in a university environment. I ended up majoring in psychology, with a minor in both philosophy and physiology. I did not become a psychologist, but the doors began to open the day I got my BA degree.

    Because I was a college graduate, I was eligible to become a officer in the Air Force, where I learned many skills. I was a navigator, and one of the many associated skills which I was particularly good at was radar scope interpretation. There's not much call for navigators in the civilian world, but I wouldn't trade the total experience for anything. Working with motivated, well educated men and women working for a higher ideal than self, learning leadership and management skills in a real world situation; these are just a few benefits of working in the military.

    Because I was good at what I did, I became an instructor, and learned to teach. Because I had a BA, I was eligible to pursue a Masters degree in education. Because I had so much hands-on experience with computers, I was able to pursue careers in both education and technology after I got out of the Air Force.

    There have been lean times over the years, but I've always had at least a part time job. Today, I have a full time job, a part time teaching job, and my own business I run on the side. I also still do the occasional home improvement project. All three of my children are college graduates and talented in their respective fields, with multiple skill sets at their disposal. I still take classes on professional topics, maybe someday I'll get a PhD.

    There are so many young people who treat school as something to be endured before they make their first million. They never develop a true appreciation for education, and they have a marked distaste for any job that involves sweat. The capacity for hard work and a well cultivated brain are both necessary to make a productive member of society. I only wish we had more people like that.

  10. EASTTEXASREDNECK Avatar
    EASTTEXASREDNECK

    GREAT COLUMN. IT'S TOO BAD THE SCUMBAG POLITICIANS WOULD NEVER LOWER THEMSELVES TO DO ANY MANUAL LABOR. THAT IS WHY THE MEXICANS ARE TAKING OVER THE COUNTRY. AND WHEN THEY GET AMNESTY AND VOTE, WE ARE GOING TO SEE THE GREATEST CORRUPTION IN THE WORLD. THE SOCIALIST DEMOCRATS WILL SEEM LIKE KINDERGARDEERS UP AGAINST PHDs. WHEN IT COME TO CORRUPTION.

  11. John Avatar
    John

    Tom,

    Good writing, I am glad to hear of the trend. I graduated from HS in 1970 and made the decision to not go on to college. Six weeks later I was working at a major telecommunication company as a lineman. After working a number of years in the "trenches", I took a management positiona and through hard work and perseverance, achieved mid-level management at this mega-company, retiring afte 38 years. Although it worked out for me, I doubt that there would be one in a thousand that could now follow the same advancement. The problem? – all these corporations now want college degrees, even at entry-level laborer positions, focusing on credentials and not necessarily good sense and work ethic. Perhaps we'll see a tidewater change.

  12. Ernie Avatar
    Ernie

    In the now plus yrs that some of these lazy SOB's on unemployment are enjoying, They could have went to a trade school and learned something else, some of these schools even help with jo placement. Of course, thats only if the person wants to work in the first place.

  13. alan Avatar
    alan

    maybe i'm going off the track a bit here, but i just retired as a tech from a major telecommunications company after 30+ yrs. when i hired out everything got done the right way because that's the way we learned it. starting 10 yrs or so ago we started watching things deteriorate. that was the time when hiring policy changed from demonstrated ability to sheepskin. later on management started to be taken over by MBAs who didn't even have to shave, and executive decisions were made in response to powerpoint presentations by kids who didn't even know how a telephone worked, and who expressed surprise when confronted with a landline phone. the company whose pension i draw (for now) has gone from $75.00 per share to less than $5.00. how long before i have to go back into the labor force?

  14. mrarizona Avatar
    mrarizona

    EASTTEXASREDNECK,

    NEVER MIND, YOUR NAME SAYS IT ALL.

  15. DHFabian Avatar
    DHFabian

    The problem is that the white collar guys effectively got rid of labor unions and then shipped our jobs to other countries.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *